The Gene of AI is an overlooked sci-fi master piece that nails our current AI moment

2 hours ago 1

Published Jun 28, 2026, 9:26 AM EDT

As AI becomes even more prevalent in our lives, this anime offers a unique perspective on its relation to humanity

gene-of-ai-episode-10-gohongi-surgery Image: Muse Communications/Madhouse

For the better part of three decades, anime has been one of the most fascinating places to wrestle with the idea of artificial intelligence. Mamoru Oshii’s masterpiece Ghost in the Shell is one of the most recognizable examples, offering philosophical monologues on whether consciousness can survive inside a machine. Even earlier, Yasuomi Umetsu’s “Presence” from the 1987 landmark anthology series Robot Carnival explored the potential coexistence between man and machine, a theme later revisited in 2006’s Time of Eve. More recently, Netflix’s Pluto offers interesting insights into the capacity for AI to feel human emotions.

But in 2026, with artificial intelligence no longer feeling like distant science fiction, The Gene of AI suddenly feels even more relevant. Kyuri Yamada’s 2015 manga and the 2023 anime adaptation produced by Madhouse (Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End, Perfect Blue, Sonny Boy), address similar questions, but with an intriguing twist. The story doesn’t tackle world-ending conspiracies or dystopian uprisings, but focuses on ethical dilemmas that feel unsettlingly close to our own reality.

The Gene of AI is more like a medical drama than anything else, and that’s what gives it this unique flavor. Each episode follows Dr. Hikaru Sudo, a physician who specializes in treating humanoids living alongside humans in the near future. His patients range from humanoids suffering psychological trauma to humans whose relationships with artificial beings raise impossible ethical questions. Over time, Sudo finds himself navigating less a medical profession than a moral minefield, where every treatment risks redefining what it means to be human.

The patient-procedural format is what makes The Gene of AI such an easy binge-watch. The anthology structure means every episode poses a different moral question without demanding an encyclopedic knowledge of some sprawling sci-fi universe. One week, the show asks whether it's ethical to alter an AI's emotions; the next week, it's quietly unpacking whether love between a human and an artificial being is fundamentally different from any other relationship. Rarely does it hand you a definitive answer.

That restraint is something editor Ichiro Miyazaki highlighted in a recent interview with Anime Hunch, in which he discussed the manga's long-awaited English release. Rather than pushing readers toward a "correct" conclusion, he says the stories were intentionally written to make audiences arrive at their own conclusions.

“AI has become a much more familiar presence in our daily lives. As readers will discover, the climaxes of the stories are deliberately written not to push a single answer, such as “this is what you should do” or ‘this is the right choice,’” Miyazaki said. “Instead, the series is designed to invite readers to think for themselves.”

In an era where AI increasingly promises instant responses to every question imaginable, Miyazaki argues that the process of thinking has become just as important as the answer itself. It's an observation that feels surprisingly profound coming from a manga that originally began serialization back in 2015.

According to Miyazaki in the same interview, Gene of AI was never intended to be an ongoing series. It started as a one-shot before storied manga publisher Akita Shoten's editor-in-chief insisted it continue because the concept was simply too compelling to leave behind. That instinct proved remarkably prescient. Yamada's background covering the IT industry as a journalist also gave the series an authenticity that distinguishes it from other AI-adjacent fiction that leans purely on spectacle.

That's why The Gene of AI feels different from modern AI discourse. Today's headlines often frame artificial intelligence as either humanity's greatest productivity tool or its greatest existential threat. Those debates matter, but they're also abstract. The Gene of AI shrinks the conversation down to an individual level and asks what happens when artificial people need compassion more than upgrades.

Instead of worrying about AI achieving sentience, The Gene of AI forces us to ask if we'll still remember how to treat others with basic empathy once the boundaries completely blur.


The Gene of AI is streaming on Crunchyroll.

Read Entire Article